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annexedlogs2022-08-14 08:50 pm
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Mission Log #1

How It Works
Welcome to the first mission log in Annexed!
How Mission Logs Work: There will generally be two main missions per month, with different focuses tailored to different skillsets (usually stealth vs. fighting, though other skillsets will be tapped on). Each mission will be posted in phases, with a prompt for the start of each phase. The plotting post will give you a rundown of what the missions are, how they might go, and what might be discovered. Characters may partake in whichever pat of the operation they choose, whether it's a large prominent part or a more supporting role. Characters may participate in both missions, and as many phases as they wish.
Mod Guidance: Players may request occasional scene-setting when they hit a point where they're unsure what might happen next in a log or what their characters might encounter. There will be a "Mod Guidance" comment that players can reply to in order to request this kind of scene-setting.
Completion of Missions: There will be a submissions comment for anyone who's threaded out a portion of the mission. Once a thread has been completed at least halfway, please submit your character's progress and plans for the thread to the submissions thread. These submissions are the main way that the mod will decide how the mission went in the next month's wrap-up post, so they are very important!
Plotting Post: Here!
The Cure For Immunity
The Witches have received intel through their spies in Zephyr that a lab located just outside the outskirts of the city is engaged in experiments on sentient beings to create a serum that will change those people who are incompatible with Sylphid reproduction. This serum would allow the Sylphid to take over the bodies of people who would usually be fatal to them.
The serum is said to function at a 45% success rate already.
Obviously this would be a major blow to all life on the Broken World, as 70% of the population is immune to being taken over by Sylphid. This serum would allow them to increase their population numbers exponentially and turn a powerful takeover into a nigh-unstoppable one.
The Witch will be calling a general meeting at the Command Center where she will explain the situation and the proposed missions to stop it.
Mission A: Into the Lab
Mission Appropriateness: Chipped or Stripped
Mission Focus: Stealth and recon.
This mission will focus on stealth and recon, with operatives conducting surveillance on the lab to work out the rounds of the guards and other staff so they can infiltrate and take the information on the Sylphid serum in order to reverse engineer it and hopefully make a serum to make everyone immune to Sylphid takeover. The Witch passionately states in her opening speech that this would be an immense blow against the Sylphid and is a very important mission.
Nestled in the jungle a few blocks outside city limits is a low cement building with a high barbed-wire-topped chain-link fence around it. The lab is built like a fortress with thick walls, very few windows, and a thick roof made of cement and tile, almost bomb-proof. All in all, the Sylphid aren't exactly subtle, the place might as well scream 'secret lab to create top-secret serums.' There's also a regular round of security guards accompanied by guard dogs that make their way around the perimeter, and security cameras at every entrance and exit.
There is plenty of cover around the building for operatives to watch the rounds of the guards, the way the cameras swivel, and get a feeling for what kind of people enter and exit the building. Surveillance can be conducted the old-fashioned way, by just watching the building from many different angles and sharing observations by camera. They can also be done in a variety of other ways, depending on individual powers and abilities - want to pretend to be making a delivery so you can scope out the front desk? take photos or videos of rounds or entrances and exits to study? draw a rough map of the grounds to show everybody? Go for it!
There are a variety of ways to get into the building, but surveillance will boil down to four main routes of entry:
⇝ The first is a direct frontal entry, where characters may bluff their way inside the building in a variety of ways including pretending to make a delivery, taking down a single guard and stealing their uniform, or otherwise working out a ruse to get inside.
⇝ The second is a through a single bulletproof glass skylight in the roof of the building, directly above the mess hall, which should be empty just after lunch time. There is a strong lock on the skylight, but it can be picked and there are no traps.
⇝ The third is through the back entrance, near where the guards' staff room is, in a secondary building. This route will require taking out several guards as silently as possible and entering disguised as guards.
⇝ The fourth is through a ventilation system that can be accessed by a panel high up on the wall at the one side of the building that is facing the jungle. This one will require some acrobatic skill and flexibility and might be best for a small character.
There are four major routes of entry into the lab, and characters who try any route of entry should keep in contact with people outside via radio or network to relay information found out during the infiltration phase. The rebels are trying to get as much information about the internal layout of the lab as possible in case the Sylphid opt to reuse it for another purpose in the future. They would ideally like to be able to map the entire internal structure of the facility. In all cases, photos, videos, and sketches of the inside of the lab would be welcome to the rebels.
⇝ Frontal Entry: Characters who opt to enter through the front via some kind of ruse and who gain entry will find themselves faced with a maze of corridors and rooms. This may be difficult because anyone who is allowed entry into the building generally knows their way around. Success of this particular route of entry will depend on confidence and being able to keep the ruse alive as the characters run into various different people - scientists, guards, deliverypersons, janitorial staff, and other staff. Keep the ruse up for as long as possible and make sure you get as many details of the inside of the building as possible to relay to your colleagues outside as possible.
⇝ Skylight Entry: Characters who opt to enter through the skylight will find themselves faced with a heavy lock as their first obstacle. The lock is able to be picked or hacked, depending on the characters' skillset. Once the skylight is open they will have to lower themselves into the room underneath, a mess hall for the staff in the lab, and subdue the cafeteria workers. From this point, they will need to keep themselves hidden from passers-by in the hallways, and rely on stealth and silence as much as possible while mapping out the inside of the lab, and keep in radio or network contact with those on the outside.
⇝ Back Entry: This is the method of entry that requires the most fighting. Characters will enter the back area of the building where there is a smaller outbuilding that is used by the guards for a sort of staff room while they are taking breaks, and subdue several guards to take their uniforms. After the uniforms and keycards for the building are secured, they can enter through the back door and maintain the ruse of being guards that are patrolling the building. This is where knowledge of the guard rounds comes in handy, and all that surveillance will certainly help. These characters will have to be careful to avoid the real guards as they will be able to clock that they aren't their coworkers and the "I'm new" story will only work so many times! Characters in guard uniforms will have an easier time communicating out loud on radios and the network as they're expected to be communicating by radio, and will also be able to give spare walkie-talkies to those on the outside.
⇝ Ventilation Entry: This is the most physically challenging method of entry, but a very valuable one. After accessing the ventilation system, characters will be able to crawl through the duct work in a virtually undetectable way and take photos, videos, or sketches of the rooms they can view through vents. The duct work goes everywhere throughout the building and mostly poses obstacles in the form of the mazelike system of them, occasional fans and other blockages in the ductwork, and dust and debris in the ducts including possibly rats and spiders. Some of the spiders are poisonous, as jungle spiders tend to be, and anyone bitten by the spiders will experience pain and hallucinations that may hinder them. As with all other entry methods, the people in the ventilation system should be communicating with those on the outside by radio or network.
Phase III is more straightforward than the other phases of this mission - once the infiltrators have mapped out the inside of the lab, they should locate the central computer banks and anyone with the technical expertise should make a copy of the databanks. This will require some hacking and all characters doing infiltration will be provided with a device that will allow them to hack through any passcodes required by the computer to access the information inside. Copying the database will take at least a half hour, so characters may have to create diversions, talk themselves out of hot water when people come to stop by the computer room, and otherwise distract the true staff of the building from entering the room and catching them in the act.
Once the computer banks have been copied, characters should use another device they will be given before infiltration to plant a virus in the computer banks that will corrupt everything in them. The virus will take about 10 minutes to get to the point of critical mass, a guaranteed disruption of the whole system. This phase of the mission will take at least 40 minutes total, during which characters are going to have to keep any of the real staff of the lab out of the computer room through whatever means possible, making it the point in the mission most likely to go off the rails.
After the computer system has been disrupted by the virus, characters will have to escape the building without being caught by the Sylphid staff, and may leave through any exit available so they can melt into the forest and make a clean escape.
Characters infiltrating the lab will discover several rooms where sentient test subjects are located. Some of them will be in very ill health due to side effects of the treatments they've been enduring, and all will be very willing and eager to be rescued. While some characters stay with the computer banks to copy and sabotage them, other characters may go find these rooms full of test subjects, about 45 in total, and smuggle them out of the building. Once the rebel force has been alerted to the presence of test subjects, they will send a truck to wait near the back entrance, and operatives will simply have to cut the chain link fence to make space for the subjects to get into the truck to be transported back to the Witches Camp. This mission will likely involve having to subdue several guards as the back entrance is near the guards' room.
Mission B: Disrupt The Supply Chain
Mission Appropriateness: Chipped or Stripped
Mission Focus: Recon and open battle.
This mission will focus on open battle and guerilla tactics, with operatives locating and disrupting the supply chain to the lab. It will focus on identifying shipments of equipment, food, and other supplies to the lab and interrupting them, destroying the vehicles, subduing the enemy, and taking whatever supplies they can back to the Witches Camp.
The highway leading past the lab is a seldom-used four-lane highway that snakes its way through the jungle in a mostly uninhabited area. While there are a few scattered farms and other occupied areas, most of the highway is bordered on by wild jungle, which provides a lot of cover for surveillance of the delivery vehicles that approach the lab to drop off supplies. Most of the trucks will contain food, equipment, and other sundries for the function of the lab. The trucks can be wheeled or hover, and will have various brand names emblazoned on them. Characters tasked with surveillance in these areas will settle at safe and well-hidden spots in the jungle to watch the roads and keep detailed notes on which trucks with which brand names enter the lab to deliver supplies. They will also need to keep in close contact with home base to relay this information, with notes on the times the deliveries happen and what sort of supplies may be being delivered, based on the logos on the trucks.
Characters will discover that there are actually several routes delivery trucks are taking to get to the lab, contrary to previous intel-gathering, which pointed to the quickest and most obvious route being the one the trucks used. Some trucks are taking side streets through a nearby occupied area, at the center of which is a rather skeezy truck stop where drivers stop for food before completing their deliveries. Characters will need to spread out to cover these additional routes in order to make sure they don't miss any delivery trucks.
Additionally, the truck stop may become a good source of intel, with staff being amenable through convincing, coercion, or bribing to give information on the drivers that stop in on a regular basis, what they haul, and what their timetables are like. Players are more than welcome to NPC some of the staff at the truck stop for mild interrogation, including waitresses, cashiers, station attendants, and janitorial staff.
As Mission A moves into its final phase, and much more likely to be discovered, phase II of Mission B will go into full effect. Operatives will have discovered four routes that trucks are taking into the lab, and will need to cover all of them for both surveillance and to blockade them or sabotage them and stop the trucks.
⇝ Route 1: The main and quickest route that trucks are taking to the lab, which is directly down the highway and off of it into the lab driveway. This will be the toughest one to blockade due to the size of the highway - four lanes, though seldom used, is quite a distance to cover.
⇝ Route 2: A winding side road that goes over a small creek and then beside it, only two lanes across and through a mostly uninhabited area. Because it's uninhabited and a smaller road with less traffic, it will be easier to blockade and is also the second most used route by the trucks.
⇝ Route 3: A relatively direct route from the truck stop through some back streets that straightforwardly traverse farmland. There is more traffic on this road that is civilian because of its proximity to farmland, and will require a bit more effort due to this civilian traffic.
⇝ Route 4: Another straightforward route, though this time through a civilian-occupied area, and close to a school for the small community surrounding the truck stop. This will be the most difficult to blockade without doing too much collateral damage to the civilian area around it and the school.
Characters will have been given bombs that they may use to destroy the roads themselves as well as access to heavy machinery they can use to move cement blocks into the roadways to block traffic from getting through. Once the roads are blocked or destroyed, characters will have to subdue the Sylphid staff on the trucks through force, which might be a significant fight, as all Sylphid, even down to truck drivers, are well-trained in combat. These drivers are also well-armed, considering the mission they're on to supply the lab, which is one of the top priorities for the Sylphid as of now.
Phase III is relatively straightforward compared to the rest of the missions - unload the trucks and carry the supplies back to the Witches Camp via truck or hover-ATV, then destroy the trucks. This will mostly be through demolitions or by setting the trucks on fire, leaving them as a signal to the Sylphid that they can't go about their research without being challenged.
Characters may disable the trucks in whatever fashion they wish, so long as it leaves a good, lasting message to the Sylphid. The Sylphid drivers that aren't killed should be captured and bound and loaded into a truck to be taken back to the Witches Camp to be interrogated or used as bargaining chips for the more diplomatic side of the rebellion.
Damage to civilian property or injury of civilians, especially children who may be playing at the playground by the school would be seriously looked down on and a huge blow to the rebellion's reputation, so characters are encouraged to keep destruction to a minimum on Route 4 in particular. In fact, the rebellion would prefer if operatives could load the trucks onto heavy machinery and take them to the Witches Camp for demolition instead of leaving them on Route 4.
Additionally, operatives along the routes will find that some of the trucks contain caged and restrained test subjects. Once these are discovered, they should be taken by truck back to the Witches Camp. Unfortunately, these test subjects can't be returned to their families in Zephyr because their chips would immediately mark them for death - the Sylphid would, without thinking twice, kill people that were marked as test subjects who escaped, especially after being rescued by the rebellion, in case they were corrupted by the rebellion. These test subjects will have to be comforted and brought back to the Camp to either join the rebellion or be civilians in the Camp.
no subject
Getting out will likely be easier than getting in as long as we aren't compromised, but having multiple escape routes at least means people won't make themselves too obvious focusing on a single one. [Which she absolutely would not put past people anyway, but most of the ones here seem to have experience with this sort of thing, so she's trying not to assume.] But I'd be more concerned if they did know we were coming. It's an infiltration, after all. It's that much more of a problem if they're on their guard.
[Not that the prospect seems to bother Mikumo much, with the faint, almost amused note that plays around her voice and expression.]
no subject
Some were talking about going through the back door and using uniforms as disguises. That is already more exposure than I am used to. [Especially with her unique hair to make her stand out.]
Considering we escaped last week, I would have thought that they would be on more alert. [She sighed.] I'm not sure if it's confidence or negligence.
no subject
It's entirely possible they didn't figure we'd actually join the resistance. There seem to be plenty of civilians in the camp...and this is a very fast turnaround on another operation after the previous one, considering the organisation needed.
[Delta Flight has to be available on short notice by their nature, so Mikumo's used to that sort of thing, but ideally a mission like this would need more of a lead-up and preparation than this.]
no subject
[As Mikumo continues, Eight half-turns back to face her. That... that was a good point. Clearly there's a number of people among their number who had been trained and prepared, which makes their capture all the more surprising. Or, perhaps, the Sylphid wanted to capitalize on it?]
But we're not civilians, are we? [That taunting smirk was there again. A knowing smirk, acknowledging Mikumo's skill and insight.]
no subject
I don't think I've met any "civilians" from our little group yet. They may want to choose their fresh hosts a little better next time. [If the Sylphid do really hollow people out, about the only thing that might benefit them from experienced people is physical ability and muscle memory. So she does find herself curious about how their current numbers ended up coming about.]
The question is whether they realised that before they brought us here, considering compatibility would presumably be their main focus.
no subject
There's also been a lot of humans, too. You would think they would have some sort of preference for you. [As she says this her eyebrows furrow.] ...do you think they studied our bodies as well? [Would they be even interested in bodies made primarily out of ink...?]
no subject
I would guess they needed to study us somehow to decide that we were compatible, though how they did it is still an open question. [It ties back into how advanced the technology used must have been to draw them to here from so many corners of the galaxy, and from across different dimensions.] It could be a numbers game, as far as human preference. Humans are definitely one of the most prolific species in the galaxy where I come from.
no subject
[So, instead, she decides to focus on the second part.] You're all dead on mine. [Her eyes close as that seemed harsh, even for her.] ...what I mean to say is that the last human had not been seen in over 1,000 years.
I'm sure the Squid Institute would love to have a chance to get to know you all better, too. [But this conversation had already worn out its welcome.] ...should we get back on topic of the mission?
no subject
[Mikumo's somewhat loosely forming references for where all the other people here are coming from - and when, since they seem to be from all over the place as far as both time and dimensions are involved.
And while Mikumo figures it might not be a bad idea to wait until at least most of them are ready to enter the facility, since one person getting too far ahead is going to lack the necessary support to breach a facility like this, she does give a mild, assenting hum in answer to the question.]
I'm planning to upload my results here and check around the perimeter for what others have set up before going in. It'll be useful to have those in the ventilation a little further ahead so we can scout, but the group loses coherence if we don't have some kind of structure for when we're entering.
no subject
[The mention of the ventilation system draws her attention to it. Intentional or not, that was the path she was thinking would be important to go. Plus, that kind of quiet, claustrophobic form of infiltration that was out sight of everyone was a comfort. She could chart out the interior layout and hopefully make things run smoother.]
Copy. Since there does seem to be a little time, let's wait her for the moment and see what else people know. I have not really looked at the building, but saw some people noting patrols and other points of interest.
And you're right. Everyone does seem skilled, but we're not quite working together like a unified team. More like... highly skilled solo operatives. [A chuckle.] ...or agents.
no subject
There's definitely a number of posts about the patrols. The entrance I've seen the least about so far is the skylight, so I presume nobody's gotten close enough yet to see whether it's locked or easily pickable, or it's just not worth it compared to the others. [But she pulls up the network again just to be sure...which involves her tapping two fingernails together, summoning up a small holographic display from the computer system built into her false nails.]
I've been accused of being a lone wolf before, but that does seem to be the style of most of the people here so far. Most are likely either unused to being part of a team or have a very particular team dynamic they're used to that this isn't fulfilling.
[She's a little of both, honestly.]
no subject
[It was indeed! It stand for Mollusk Era, and unbeknownst to 8, but knownst to us, the Mollusk Era doesn't start until 10,000 years after the end of humanity. Ah to know what her people know not.]
I suppose this is why we're taught to supress our individuality and focus on performance. Er... [That was a little vague.] My people, I mean.
We have our mission, and we are expected a certain level of proficiency to succeed. To fail in that expectation would mean everyone was lacking. Can we count on each other to perform our duties?
I suppose this is the first mission for us to find out.
[Though she would admit that exceeding expectations was valuable as well.]
no subject
Humans tend to be very focused on individuality, and many humanoid races I'm familiar with are similar. So it's understandable it would be messy to begin with. [She's still not seeing much on the skylight entrance yet, so she dismisses the holographic screen.]
I imagine it will get done one way or another, but less efficiently than with a cohesive group. We'll have to see the details later.
no subject
[There wasn't much longer before she returns her attention to Mikumo.] Are you going to be on comms? You seem to have a pretty good handle on the situation.
no subject
[And once they reach the central computer system, she'd rather be focusing on getting that done as soon as possible rather than running comms on top of it. She's fairly certain there's others intending to do that specifically, so there's no need for her to double up.]
no subject
It's a big compound. Hopefully we find something worth reporting.
no subject
I think I'll be on my way for the moment, though. We can't afford to chat for too long. [Mikumo usually lone wolfs it, but she's taking more care with this given she's not as familiar with this world and how things tend to operate with the resistance, so she wants to link up with a few more people and see when others are planning to enter.]
no subject
I'll stick here a while longer, then, to wait and see what everyone plans to do. And... you should really consider working comms! You are very insightful and you have a very nice voice. It is easy to listen to. [She could practically be an idol!]
no subject
I'll consider it for next time, perhaps. [And then she's gone, disappearing into the trees like she was never there in the first place. She might not have access to her powers here, but she has plenty of experience with stealth.]